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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*Misc\s+junk\:\s+welding\s+to\s+stainless\,\s+car\s+jack\s+pads\,\s+and\s+tracing\s*$/: 10 ]

Total 10 documents matching your query.

1. Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: Mike Lee - Team Banana Racing <mikel@ichips.intel.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 14:03:14 -0800
Hey everyone! Hope you all had a great holiday season! I was fortunate enough to get some nifty presents, and some free time to actually try them out. Of course, in our household, that leads to more
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00028.html (10,576 bytes)

2. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: Eric Murray <ericm@lne.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 14:15:39 -0800
Was it a little box that he clipped on to one wire, and a probe thing with a speaker that he used to find the line? If so, this is the same or similar to what telephone installers (and sysadmins who
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00029.html (10,650 bytes)

3. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: "Arvid Jedlicka" <arvidj@visi.com>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 16:54:02 -0600
like cup-like I found my pinch weld device on the table saw on the bottom of a 2x4. Had to run it through a couple of times (blade height slightly higher than the pinch, width as desired) but it was
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00031.html (8,748 bytes)

4. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: "Timothy R. Hoerning" <hoerni@cooper.edu>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 17:53:46 -0500 (EST)
Sounds like a blithy! (Got that name from a coworker who was a former telephone lineman.) Typically they are used for ringing out phone lines. Not sure how well they would work on Coax. Here is the b
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00032.html (10,554 bytes)

5. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: Scott Hall <sch8489@garnet.acns.fsu.edu>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 18:47:24 -0500 (EST)
my jack has the pad like yours has (I guess, mine has ~5" diameter, I've seen the ones that are ~1.5" also). I just lift under a floorpan just inside the pinch weld. no problem so far. otherwise I *t
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00034.html (10,320 bytes)

6. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: "John Viviani" <geeno@adelphia.net>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 18:49:08 -0500
Some nice new toys. For number 1 (the jack) , if you are careful you can lift a car by the pinch welds. I have worked in shops for years and have yet to see one of the pads you are talking about bein
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00035.html (11,469 bytes)

7. RE: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: Randall Young <ryoung@NAVCOMTECH.COM>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 16:16:27 -0800
I have used them on coax (we call them 'toners' around here), but you have to isolate at least one end, and run the tone down the normally grounded shield. Even on phone wire, they have a very limit
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00038.html (9,258 bytes)

8. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: "John T. Blair" <jblair@exis.net>
Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2002 19:12:37 -0500
I haven't seen what you are talking about. But when I use my floor jack, 1. I don't jack from the "reinforcement" on the sills. I jack either from the cross brace under (in front of) the engine, or t
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00039.html (10,687 bytes)

9. Re: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: Richard Beels <beels@technologist.com>
Date: Fri, 11 Jan 2002 02:23:28 -0500
1. You can buy a plastic piece from JC Whitney for $6-7, that's where I got mine. I gave it away yo my father-in-law and he's never returned it so I did a variation on the 2x4 (which always splits) a
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00042.html (11,785 bytes)

10. RE: Misc junk: welding to stainless, car jack pads, and tracing (score: 1)
Author: "PHINNEY,HARRY K (HP-Corvallis,ex1)" <harry_phinney@hp.com>
Date: Fri, 11 Jan 2002 09:38:51 -0800
Mike Lee wrote (in part): For the best possible weld you should get stainless nuts, weld them with a low carbon stainless filler, and use a different blend of gas. You can probably get away with usin
/html/shop-talk/2002-01/msg00046.html (9,233 bytes)


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